a deadly restaurant fire in madrid. two people have died and at least ten others are injured. you re watching bbc news. now its time for sportsday with chetan pathak hello and welcome to sportsday i m chetan pathak coming up on tonight s programme: a huge win for leicester in their fight for premier league survival they re out of the bottom three down but not out chelsea are narrowly beaten by barcelona in the first leg of their champions league semi final eight tries for england who thrash ireland to stay on course for a grand slam in the women s six nations also coming up on sportsday tonight. into the quarter the finals of the world snooker championship the rocket ronnie o sullivan blasts his way past hossein vafei welcome along this saturday night, thank you forjoining us. we start with the fight for survival in the premier league more on a huge win for leicester to come but the day started with a missed opportunity for leeds. they could have pulled clear o
officials. republican leaders in the house sending a letter to secretary blinken stating it is apparent the biden campaign played an active role in the origins of the public statement that had the effect of helping suppress the hunter biden story and preventing american citizens from making a fully informed decision during the 2020 presidential election. dana: all this coming as an i.r.s. whistleblower is claiming political interference in the hunter biden tax investigation. senator tom cotton saying sooner or later the truth will come out about hunter and the family business. very troubling reports that the i.r.s. and the f.b.i. have been thwarted from investigating hunter biden s dealings, as you say are not about hunter biden. a very troubled by private citizen. the truth will come out and why you start to see whistleblowers come out. dana: joining us now is nancy mace who sits on the house oversight committee. one of the things if you watch the five and gutfeld an
america s newsroom. bill: i m bill hemmer. jose gutierrez is an architect from cincinnati. he was in mexico visiting his fiance over the holidays and they went missing christmas day. 300 miles northwest of mexico city, the region known for cartel violence. dana: williamlagelage is live in los angeles. bill: 40 million americans a year visit mexico. being kidnapped is a small risk, some areas are a lot worse than others especially where cartel checkpoints leave tourists defenseless. the latest victim ohio architect in mexico visiting his fiance. they were offered dinner with two relatives when they disappeared on christmas day. we were just going to have a dinner together along with her sister and her cousin. witnesses report seeing the four pull into a van, later found filled with bullet holes. bodies buried nearby. officials confirm the fatalities this week with his employer saying we ll miss him more than words can express. where this happened is in the middle o
aggressive direction and it follows the opening of the ruling party congress in beijing where he addressed the issue of taiwan, which china claims as part of its territory. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe who s the senior associate editor at the new statesman, and eleanor langford, the political reporter for politics home. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. all of tomorrow s papers focus on the biggest u turn in british political history, let s start with, the ft focuses on one of the biggest u turns in recent british history and says truss fights for survival as business chiefs and plotters pile on pressure. the government faces decisions of eye watering difficulty as he speaks economic stability. the guardian features a photo of us smiling chancellor after the paper calls and astounding you on tax. the times features a grim looking front bench with the headline, £5,000 fuel bills. humil
times with a picture of rishi sunak at his campaign launched today. i thought there was an interesting line in this piece, emma, a new poll by opinion said soonack was the preferred candidate of 28% of party members. it was followed by liz truss on 20%. and i think that is interesting. because at the moment all of these candidates are having to appeal to mp5. but at the end of the day it will be the membership that actually has to choose who wins and they may not necessarily want the same things, may they? you are riuht. the same things, may they? you are riht. it the same things, may they? you are riuht. it is the same things, may they? you are right- it is so the same things, may they? you are right. it is so less the same things, may they? you are right. it is so less controllable, - right. it is so less controllable, it is not your whatsapp groups, not people you can talk to in the bars and very much what, not that you can engineer the votes, but you can control your